Former French skater Sarah Abitbol spoke of her relief on January 9 after her ex-coach Gilles Beyer was charged with sexual assault.

Beyer was charged on January 8 following accusations from at least six women skaters or former skaters, although a source close to the case said that older cases, including Abitbol’s, could not be prosecuted under France’s statute of limitations.

Abitbol told French magazine l’Obs she was “relieved that the courts have summoned Gilles Beyer. Finally!”

Beyer, a former elite figure skating coach, is at the centre of a scandal that convulsed the sport in France last year after former world championships medallist Abitbol made accusations against him in a book.

Abitbol wrote Beyer repeatedly sexually assaulted her when she was aged between 15 and 17 in the early 1990s. Her book led to several other skaters coming forward.

Beyer was taken into police custody on January 6 morning but was released on January 8 when he was charged by the Paris public prosecutor’s office with “sexual assault by a person in authority and sexual harassment by a person in authority”.

Abitbol, however, said she was disappointed that the charges were not more severe due to the statute of limitations under French law. “I see that the charges are ‘assault’ and ‘harassment’. I suffered rape,” she said.

“But it’s unfortunate, these facts are time barred. I know that another skater testified to the police, to have been raped by the same aggressor. But for her too, the facts are prescribed.”

She added: “I find it unfair that we cannot be on the bench of victims, for justice. I hope that other victims will emerge from their silence.”

Contacted on January 8, Beyer’s lawyer, Thibault de Montbrial, refused to comment on the charges.

A source close to the case said that only more recent cases, involving six women who were adults at the time of the alleged events, can be pursued.

Three of them have accused Beyer of sexual assault.

In the small world of French figure skating, Abitbol’s book Un Si Long Silence had led to a flood of revelations.

Other skaters have levelled accusations of sexual assault, sexual harassment or blackmail against other coaches or skating coaches.

Didier Gailhaguet, the president of the French Federation of Ice Sports (FFSG) for more than 20 years over two spells, was forced to resign, after a long arm wrestle with Sports Minister Roxana Maracineanu, in early February 2020.

An investigation launched by the Sport Ministry then revealed suspicions over 21 FFSG coaches, 12 of whom were accused of “acts of sexual harassment or assault”.